Prioritizing Health | New Heart Health Insights From ACC.25: Science Affecting Practice Today

Studies presented at ACC.25 in, explored a range of topics touching on patient care and helping to refine practice. Highlights, including several making major media headlines, included:
Plant-Based Diets and Total Mortality in Cardiometabolic Diseases
In a first-of-its-kind study investigating the benefits of plant-based diets specifically in people with cardiometabolic diseases, Zhangling Chen, MD, PhD, et al., found that closer adherence to a healthy plant-based diet was associated with a 17% to 24% lower risk of all-cause mortality, while closer adherence to an unhealthy plant-based diet saw a 28% to 36% increased risk of all-cause mortality. The study included 78,000 people with cardiometabolic diseases who participated in large prospective studies in the UK, U.S. or China, and scored participants based on their responses to 24-hour dietary recall interviews or dietary questionnaires at baseline.
Sex Differences in CV Health Status and Long-Term Outcomes In Primary Prevention
Although women overall are more likely to have fewer negative risk factors related to cardiovascular disease than men, women have a greater likelihood of experiencing a myocardial infarction (MI), stroke or other cardiovascular event than men with a similar risk profile. Maneesh Sud, MD, PhD, et al., analyzed data from more than 175,000 Canadian adults and focused on eight factors associated with cardiovascular disease including diet, sleep, physical activity, smoking, BMI, blood glucose, lipids and blood pressure (BP). "We found that women tend to have better health than men, but the impact on outcomes is different," Sud said. "The combination of these factors has a bigger impact in women than it does in men."
New Wearables Metric Associated With CVD: Daily Heart Rate Per Step
A new daily heart rate per step (DHRPS) metric, calculated by dividing the average daily heart rate by the number of steps taken per day, was introduced by Zhanlin Chen, MS, et al.
Looking at Fitbit data and electronic health records from 7,000 U.S. adults, the study found the likelihood of type 2 diabetes was two-fold higher, heart failure was 1.7-times higher, high BP 1.6-times higher and coronary atherosclerosis 1.4-times higher in individuals with, vs. without elevated DHRPS. No relationship between DHRPS and risk of stroke or MI was identified. DHRPS was more strongly associated with cardiovascular disease diagnoses than other common wearables metrics like daily heart rate or step count alone.
Bilateral Ovarian Removal Could Increase HF Risk
Women who underwent a bilateral oophorectomy had a 1.5-fold increased risk of developing HF vs. women who had both their ovaries. Narathorn Kulthamrongsri, MD, at al., examined data collected from 6,814 females between 2017 and 2023 in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. They noted that White women and those who underwent ovary removal at younger ages had an even higher, twofold increased risk. "We found that as the age at which a woman has her ovaries removed goes up by one year, the development of [HF] happens about 0.6 years later," Kulthamrongsri said.
CV-Related Maternal Mortality on the Rise in the US
The rate of maternal mortality related to cardiovascular causes more than doubled between 1999 and 2022 in the U.S., according to a study using data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention WONDER database. Mohammad Ahabab Hossain, MD, et al., note that Black women had about triple the rate of maternal mortality as White women and those living in the South saw the highest mortality rate of any U.S. region. The COVID-19 pandemic may have also been a factor. "We're heading in the wrong direction," Hossain said. "The [U.S.] is supposed to be a global leader in advancing health and medicine, and the fact that we still have pregnant women who are dying – often because of preventable causes – should sound alarm bells.
Life-Space Mobility and All-Cause Hospitalization, Mortality In Older Adults With HFpEF
Patients with HF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) who scored in the lowest tertile for life-space mobility – a metric measuring the degree to which patients moved around in their communities over the course of a month – were 2.4-times more likely to die or be hospitalized within one year vs. patients scoring in the highest tertile. Dylan P. Marshall, MD, MPH, et al., administered questionnaires to 175 consecutive patients treated for HFpEF at Weill Cornell Medical Center from 2019 to 2023 to conduct their analysis. "Our results are consistent with other disease areas and highlight that, for patients with HFpEF, we have to address all domains of their care, which includes cognitive, physical and social domains," Marshall said.
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Rates of Congenital Heart Defects Rise in States With Restrictive Abortion Laws
States with more restrictive abortion laws following the U.S. Supreme Court's 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision have a higher incidence of babies born with cyanotic congenital heart disease (CCHD), according to a retrospective study presented at ACC.25.
Using birth certificate data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Stephanie Tseng, MD, et al., examined live births from 2016-2024 in 29 states, 20 classified as having "very or the most restrictive" abortion laws, and nine classified as having "very or the most protective" laws.
The incidence of CCHD live births rose in the restrictive cohort but remained relatively stable in the protective cohort. The difference between the two cohorts increased after Dobbs and exceeded the estimate calculated in its absence. The median monthly overage in the expected to observed difference was 9.6 per 100,000 births.
The study shows only potential associations as it was not designed to identify causes of observed trends; other factors could explain the differences.
"If the trend towards an increasing number of CCHD births is true, then there will be a larger population of patients with [CCHD] that will need [early and lifelong] health care," states Tseng.
"The health care system, particularly in states with restrictive policies, will need to prepare for these patients, as we know that CCHD patients have higher health care utilization needs. This includes health care costs, resources and [an increased] need for health care workers. There will be non-financial physical and emotional strains on families as well."
Clinical Topics: Prevention
Keywords: Cardiology Magazine, ACC Publications, ACC25, ACC Annual Scientific Session, Prospective Studies, Wearable Electronic Devices, Primary Prevention